In about 24 hours, more than two dozen Facebook pages have appeared, some urging authorities to find and kill the former Los Angeles police officer suspected of killing three people this week. Other pages have praised Dorner and his 11,000-word manifesto that alleges LAPD corruption and weaves in pop culture references and shout outs to celebrities like Charlie Sheen, Anthony Bourdain and Tim Tebow.

One web page on Friday even declared "Christopher Dorner for President."

"This page is putting forth the proposal that we the people elect Christopher Jordan Dorner as president of the United States of America. This man has done what the founding fathers did, in declaring war on the corrupt ruling class. We propose electing a man who could no longer sit idly by and watch as malicious tyrants abuse the innocent," the community page stated.

Among the most popular of the fan pages is "I Support Christopher Jordan Dorner," which had close to 2,000 "likes" by 3:30 p.m. Friday.

The supporter, who said he does not know Dorner, said his support is not for Dorner's actions, but his cause.

The person, who said he did not know Dorner personally, declined to identify himself.

"I don't condone the acts of killing people, but I was going to try to spin it in a way that people can actually learn from him," he told the Daily News during a phone interview. "It's a perfect story about a person who wanted to just do the right thing but couldn't catch a break. Maybe if enough people talk about it, hear it, see it, maybe some change can come out of it."

Dorner's own official Facebook page was deactivated Thursday. Facebook officials told the Daily News they do not comment on ongoing investigations but provided this statement:

"We work with law enforcement to the extent required by law, and as needed to keep the site and those who use it safe. We always seek to respond promptly to requests when we deem there's an immediate risk to the safety of any our users."

Dorner's official Twitter account @ChrisDorner has also been suspended, but that didn't stop the tweets.

By Friday morning, at least five fake Twitter handles were created that provided discussions - both ridiculous and insightful - in 140 characters or less.

A brief conversation included @LtChrisDorner, a parody Twitter account that uses a photo of Rambo as an avatar.

@MadhouseMuse tweeted: "Christopher Dorner shot 4 people & LAPD shot 3 innocent bystanders in trying to take down Dorner. Can't tell the good guys from the bad."

In response, @LtChrisDorner sent: "#winning I just hope #LAPD are not sore losers!"

(@MadhouseMuse did get the numbers off - LAPD fired at two innocent bystanders, not three)

Then, of course, there were the spoofs of viral memes that used Dorner's likeness and hyper-patriotic graphics such as a flying eagle with his face superimposed on the image.

Other memes simply used Dorner's photos and excerpts from his manifesto for spinoffs of motivational posters. One, on the "Christopher Jordan Dorner" fictional page, simply read: "He's got a cause? What's yours?"

"What's scary is that some people may not see it as a joke," said Stephen G. Tibbetts, a criminology professor at Cal State San Bernardino, who specializes in profiling and criminal theory.

Todd Glickman of Van Nuys said "this is why the world is a horrible place."

"When people praise a murderer for doing what he did... the world's going to hell," Glickman posted on Facebook. "Let's not forget there are many families who have lost loved ones to the nutcase."

Cecile Vargo of Tujunga also expressed her frustration with supporters threatening to "block the two of my friends that are living in lala land and sympathizing with him."

Authorities in Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Riverside and beyond continued to search for Dorner Friday after more than 100 officers combed through the snow-covered mountains in Big Bear overnight.

A Blue Alert was sent throughout Southern California on Thursday notifying multiple law enforcement agencies that Dorner was being sought for the killing and wounding peace officers and civilians.

Dorner's manifesto listed more than a dozen LAPD officers targeted because of their involvement in the events that lead to his 2009 firing from the department after three years of service.

Dorner is wanted for the killings of Cal State Fullerton assistant basketball coach Monica Quan and her fiance, Keith Lawrence, in Irvine Sunday.

Quan is the daughter of a former LAPD captain who represented Dorner in the departmental hearing that led to Dorner's firing.

Authorities said on Thursday he ambushed two Riverside officers early Thursday morning, killing one and injuring the other.

"He wants to reclaim his name, but you don't do that by shooting inncocent family members. Even people who seem like heros who fight against `authority,' they don't go after the daughter of the person they hate in the `authority,"' Tibbetts, the criminology professor, said. "There's obviously a screw loose there, and anybody that would support anything he believes - after something like that - is crazy. Actually, it's even crazier."

While supporters continue to grow, many more are popping up online to counter the message that Dorner is a hero. A short-lived page, "Find and Kill Christopher Jordan Dorner," turned into a "Christopher Dorner is NOT a hero" page by Friday with similar pages with the same sentiments.

On the "Capture & Arrest `Cop Killer' Christopher Jordan Dorner," the page creator urges people to "NOT Support this man! He belongs behind bars!"

Then there are the thousands who are confused, but captivated by what's been playing out.

As @CoreCBT tweeted: "Sat around the dinner table in T. Oaks wonderin how Chris Dorner is doing. A hero? a killer? A human? Prayin he doesn't die or kill anymore."